Jacobsen v. City of Minneapolis

132 N.W. 341, 115 Minn. 397, 1911 Minn. LEXIS 863
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 11, 1911
DocketNos. 17,206—(244)
StatusPublished

This text of 132 N.W. 341 (Jacobsen v. City of Minneapolis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobsen v. City of Minneapolis, 132 N.W. 341, 115 Minn. 397, 1911 Minn. LEXIS 863 (Mich. 1911).

Opinion

Bunn, J".

In September, 1909, defendant, the city of Minneapolis, was engaged in constructing a sewer in Thirty-Eighth Street South, in said city. A trench some thirty feet deep and twelve feet wideivas being dug. In this trench, as the work of deepening it progressed, a framework Avas constructed, consisting of sheathing made of 2 x 8 planks driven doAvn as the trench deepened, placed side by side in an upright position along the sides of the trench. This sheathing Avas held in place by stringers and braces. The stringers-were planks laid horizontally along the inside of the sheathing. They were placed in horizontal rows, one below the other, about two- and one-half feet apart. Each stringer was supported by a row of braces six feet apart. These braces were 8 x 10 timbers, and were-placed across the inside of the trench, one above the other, in perpendicular rows from the bottom to the top, íavo and one-half feet-apart.

Among the instrumentalities used in doing the work Avas a concrete mixer and a steam pump. The steam pump and mixer were placed directly OA^er the trench and ran on rails. Bail timbers were placed lengthwise over the trench. There were three sets of these [399]*399rail timbers for the mixer, each twenty-four feet in length. They rested on cross timbers eighteen feet in length laid across the top of the trench at six-foot intervals, directly over each row of braces. The ends of these cross timbers rested on planks laid on the ground immediately outside of the trench, and were blocked in order to give the rail timbers a firm bearing.

As the work progressed it became necessary to move the machines, and hence to move the rail and cross timbers. In doing this, the rail and cross timbers behind the machine were taken up and laid again in front. The timbers were thus moved two or three times each week as the work progressed. The foreman would give a general order to move the mixer or the pump, and the work was done by the men without further order or supervision. The cross timbers were intended to support the rail timbers and the machines, and were not intended to serve any other purpose, though .they were frequently used by the men to support them in climbing out of or into the trench.

The entire work incident to constructing the sewer was under the supervision of the general foreman, Flingstrom. He gave more particular attention to the machines, but was in charge of the whole-work, and directed and supervised it. An assistant foreman was. in charge of the men engaged in excavating, and another in charge of the men engaged in laying concrete. It does not appear that there were separate crews of men whose duty it was to do any particular class of work exclusively. Part of the men were in the bottom of the trench shoveling, others were putting in the sheathing, others putting in the concrete, and still others worked in front with the excavating machine deepening the trench. Some of the men worked at the steam pump and mixer. The work of moving the machines, and laying the rail and cross timbers for them to run on, was usually done by the men who worked around the machines; but the foremen would often call upon men engaged in any part of the work to help. All of the men were subject to be called from one part of the work to another at any time, and were so called frequently. They were all common laborers, and were hired by Flingstrom, and assigned by him to the different branches of the work.

[400]*400Plaintiff, a common laborer, was hired by Flingstrom, June 28, 1909, and put to work on the job. His first work was helping move and lay the rail timbers and crosspieces for the mixer. He did. this again on the next day. After this he was put to work at the bottom ■of the trench, helping put up" forms for the concrete and tamping ■concrete. He continued at this work until September Y, except that he was called upon to help move the pump on one occasion. The ■concrete was laid in forms in eighty-foot sections. On the last working day before September Y a section had been completed, and on the morning of the seventh the first business was to remove the forms, and to prepare to put them down ahead of the completed work. Plaintiff, with other men, was engaged in the work during the forenoon. At the same time the men on top were engaged in moving .and placing the cross timbers to support the rail timbers for the mixer to move ahead on.. The steam pump stood about eighty feet ahead of the mixer, and was moved ahead as the work progressed in the same manner as the mixer was, on rail timbers resting on ■cross timbers in the same way.

It was necessary to move the pump ahead, and to move the mixer 'to where the pump had stood before. In the afternoon plaintiff, with the other men he had been working with in the morning, was ordered to move the pump. They moved forward the rail timbers, and placed these and the cross timbers ahead of the pump. At the same time oth$r men moved and placed the cross timbers for the mixer. After the work incident to moving the pump was finished, the foreman ordered plaintiff and the other men, who had been brought up to aid in the work, to return to their work at the bottom ■of the trench. They all did so except plaintiff, who went to get some nails. Having secured these, he returned the key to the foreman, who was standing at the trench. Plaintiff claims that the foreman ordered him to go down into the trench at the point where they were standing, while the foreman claims that he gave no such order. Plaintiff stepped on the first brace, which was about two and one-half feet below the top of the trench, and with his hands took hold -of the cross timber above, intending to lower himself to the next .brace below. The cross timber turned and tipped toward him, and [401]*401plaintiff fell to the bottom of the trench, receiving frightful and permanent injuries.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover for such injuries. The charges of negligence were the failure of defendant to furnish him a reasonably safe place in which to work, requiring him to go into the trench without warning him of the unsafe condition of the cross timber caused by the failure to properly block it, and failing to properly inspect the work. The trial court submitted the case to the jury, instructing them that the fact that the cross timber that plaintiff took hold of was loose and insecurely placed would not of itself render the city liable, because the cross timber was laid by fellow servants of plaintiff, but that if they found that ordinary care on the part of the city required the inspection of the cross timbers as they were placed, and that Flingstrom was negligent in the matter of such inspection, plaintiff was entitled to a verdict on the question of defendant’s negligence.

1. The question on this appeal is whether this instruction was correct. It was established that the cross timber was not blocked, and there was evidence tending to show that it was placed in position by one of the men who were engaged in moving and placing the cross timbers for the concrete mixer. Were these men, in doing this work, fellow servants of plaintiff? If they were, the instruction was correct, and was as favorable to plaintiff as he could ask. If they were not fellow servants, the instruction was erroneous, and there should be a new trial.

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Bluebook (online)
132 N.W. 341, 115 Minn. 397, 1911 Minn. LEXIS 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobsen-v-city-of-minneapolis-minn-1911.